Abstract

BackgroundCompassionate health care is associated with positive patient outcomes. Educational interventions for medical students that develop compassion may also increase wellness, decrease burnout, and improve provider-patient relationships. Research on compassion training in medical education is needed to determine how students learn and apply these skills. The authors evaluated an elective course for medical students modeled after the Compassion Cultivation Training course developed by the Stanford Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education. The elective goals were to strengthen student compassion, kindness, and wellness through compassion training and mindfulness meditation training modeled by a faculty instructor. The research objectives were to understand students’ applications and perceptions of this training.MethodsOver three years, 45 students participated in the elective at the University of Louisville School of Medicine. The course administered a pre/post Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills that measured observing, describing, acting with awareness, and accepting without judgment. Qualitative analyses of self-reported experiences were used to assess students’ perceptions of compassion training and their application of skills learned through the elective.ResultsThe mindfulness inventory showed significant improvements in observing (t = 3.62, p = 0.005) and accepting without judgment skills (t = 2.87, p = 0.017) for some elective cohorts. Qualitative data indicated that students across all cohorts found the elective rewarding, and they used mindfulness, meditation, and compassion skills broadly outside the course. Students described how the training helped them address major stressors associated with personal, academic, and clinical responsibilities. Students also reported that the skills strengthened interpersonal interactions, including with patients.ConclusionsThese outcomes illuminate students’ attitudes toward compassion training and suggest that among receptive students, a brief, student-focused intervention can be enthusiastically received and positively influence students’ compassion toward oneself and others. To underscore the importance of interpersonal and cognitive skills such as compassion and mindfulness, faculty should consider purposefully modeling these skills to students. Modeling compassion cultivation and mindfulness skills in the context of patient interactions may address student empathy erosion more directly than stress management training alone. This pilot study shows compassion training could be an attractive, efficient option to address burnout by simultaneously promoting student wellness and enhanced patient interactions.

Highlights

  • Compassionate health care is associated with positive patient outcomes

  • Intervention conceptual framework and purpose Here we report the results of a three-year pilot study of a brief elective course for medical students designed to foster compassion through developing mindfulness skills

  • Participants Forty-five students from M2 and M4 participated in the Compassion Cultivation Training (CCT) elective over three years (Table 1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Compassionate health care is associated with positive patient outcomes. Educational interventions for medical students that develop compassion may increase wellness, decrease burnout, and improve providerpatient relationships. The authors evaluated an elective course for medical students modeled after the Compassion Cultivation Training course developed by the Stanford Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education. Compassion is recognizing emotional distress by others (or oneself) and the resulting desire to reduce suffering [2] This is contrasted with empathy, or personally experiencing others’ feelings and emotions [3]. Compassion and empathy contribute broadly to positive patient health outcomes and patient satisfaction [4,5,6], but repeatedly experiencing patient suffering is precarious for provider wellness. Reduced provider compassion and empathy contribute to suboptimal patient health outcomes [13, 14] and to provider burnout (described below), which motivates academic healthcare centers to address provider wellness

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call